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Neolithic 'halls of the dead' found in Herefordshire | Neolithic 'halls of the dead' found in Herefordshire |
(35 minutes later) | |
Two 6,000-year-old "halls of the dead" found in Herefordshire have been called "the discovery of a lifetime" by archaeologists. | Two 6,000-year-old "halls of the dead" found in Herefordshire have been called "the discovery of a lifetime" by archaeologists. |
Teams from the University of Manchester and Herefordshire Council made the find on Dorstone Hill, near Peterchurch. | Teams from the University of Manchester and Herefordshire Council made the find on Dorstone Hill, near Peterchurch. |
The team also found possible links between Neolithic communities in Herefordshire and Yorkshire. | The team also found possible links between Neolithic communities in Herefordshire and Yorkshire. |
Professor Julian Thomas said the "very rare" find was of "huge significance to our understanding of prehistoric life". | Professor Julian Thomas said the "very rare" find was of "huge significance to our understanding of prehistoric life". |
The remains of the halls were found within prehistoric burial mounds. | The remains of the halls were found within prehistoric burial mounds. |
Yorkshire link | Yorkshire link |
Archaeologists believe they were deliberately burnt down after they were constructed and their remains incorporated into two burial mounds. | Archaeologists believe they were deliberately burnt down after they were constructed and their remains incorporated into two burial mounds. |
They think the timber buildings may have been "halls of the dead" similar to others from the Neolithic period found in Europe. | They think the timber buildings may have been "halls of the dead" similar to others from the Neolithic period found in Europe. |
Bodies may have been placed in the halls before being moved to nearby chambered tombs. | Bodies may have been placed in the halls before being moved to nearby chambered tombs. |
Prof Thomas said: "These early Neolithic halls are already extremely rare, but to find them within a long barrow is the discovery of a lifetime." | Prof Thomas said: "These early Neolithic halls are already extremely rare, but to find them within a long barrow is the discovery of a lifetime." |
The halls are thought to be have been built between 4000 and 3600 BC. | |
A flint axe and a finely-flaked flint knife found on the site have "close affinities" with artefacts dating from around 2600 BC found in eastern Yorkshire, the team believe. | A flint axe and a finely-flaked flint knife found on the site have "close affinities" with artefacts dating from around 2600 BC found in eastern Yorkshire, the team believe. |
Dr Keith Ray, Herefordshire Council's county archaeologist, said the axe and knife may not have been traded, but placed there as part of a ceremony or an ancestral pilgrimage. | Dr Keith Ray, Herefordshire Council's county archaeologist, said the axe and knife may not have been traded, but placed there as part of a ceremony or an ancestral pilgrimage. |
He added: "These subsequent finds show that 1,000 years after the hall burial mounds were made, the site is still important to later generations living 200 miles away - a vast distance in Neolithic terms." | He added: "These subsequent finds show that 1,000 years after the hall burial mounds were made, the site is still important to later generations living 200 miles away - a vast distance in Neolithic terms." |
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